Our
second year of teaching at the American School of Kuwait, I toured Iran
while some of my colleagues spent Christmas vacation in Ethiopia. The
cheapest, most expeditious route for their travels was through Yemen;
therefore, upon leaving Ethiopia for Kuwait, the group arranged a detour
to Aden, South Yemen.

Cheryl (third from the right); Ed (center, back row)

Forcefully
Separated from Fellows

While
some of his group settled in to their hotel room, Ed Franklin chose
instead to tour the city. A simple fellow from Nebo, Illinois, Ed was
a gentle-spirited fifth grade teacher, eager to learn whatever he could
from his travels.

Unfortunately,
Ed’s stroll was cut short when Yemeni authorities accosted him,
confiscated his camera, and detained him under arrest for no apparent
reason. In then-communist South Yemen, Ed was denied due process and
“Miranda rights” to speak to an attorney.[1]

South
Yemeni officials understood that Ed was no spy; but if not convicted,
his captors would lose face. For this reason, Ed faced a two-week “kangaroo”
trial resulting in his conviction for espionage—this, on the basis
of a single photo he took of a mountain no less!

False
Imprisonment

No
longer a free man, Ed was now a convicted, incarcerated criminal. The
south side of his cell was a wall of steel bars behind which Ed remained
in solitary confinement for the next sixteen months.

Were
it not for occasional visits by British embassy personnel, his daily
diet would have consisted of a mere cup of boiled beans and Coke. In
addition to basic food items, visitors fed Ed hope—hope that he
was not forgotten even though, to his captors, he lacked humanity.

When
guards discovered a pencil stub and paper sack Ed used to write poetry,
both were taken from him. Guards permitted no such creative outlets.
However, one of the items from Ed’s suitcase was a Bible, which
he was allowed to read daily and from which he drew hope.

Bogus
promises made to Ed were punctuated with in’sh’alla
(“God willing”), so that it was God’s fault, not the
captors, when things didn’t happen as promised. The incongruity
of blaming a God that purportedly doesn’t even exist evaded Ed’s
communist captors. For good reason, Ed learned not to draw hope from
their empty words.

Threat
of Terror

One
night, Ed was startled out of sleep by machine gun fire. At first, he
could hear men yelling; then, deadly silence. Ed grieved the fact that
families would never know how, in the middle of the night, their loved
ones were slaughtered. His own life threatened by what was overheard,
Ed laid his head back on his bed, closed his eyes, and prayed the Twenty-third
Psalm.

The
next afternoon, Ed was not allowed to go to the exercise lot for the
first time in months. Not wanting to see evidence of the massacre, Ed
preferred to be alone, albeit with haunting memories of terror in the
night.

Ed
marveled how, after 130 years of British rule, this country became what
it was in the 1970s (and, I might add, what it is today). The Republic
of South Yemen was established in 1967; two years thereafter, a coup
drove it to the political left. Closing the Suez Canal eliminated 5,000
Yemeni jobs; and when the British military base left, the Yemeni lost
another 1,500 jobs.

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Kind
as he was, Ed felt sorry even for his captors. A desert with volcanic
mountains, Yemen languished with only three inches of rain each year;
and it boasted no oil reserves. Violence marked its tribal-based society,
and 95% of its citizens were illiterate.[2]

A
Political Pawn

As
a result of efforts made by Ed’s parents, Representative Paul
Finley, at great personal risk, landed in South Yemen bearing gifts
for members of the Aden government. Among those gifts were three college
scholarships from Illinois institutions, two Arabic translations of
Carl Sandburg’s biography of Lincoln, and two small busts of Lincoln.
Finley also brought with him a letter written by Henry Kissinger.

Though
uncertain as to the end result of his visit, the Representative told
Ed that his capture could well be the first step in better relations
between the United States and Yemen—small comfort for a man in
Ed’s dire circumstances, but encouraging nonetheless.

After
sixteen cruel months of captivity, solitude, hunger, and terror, Ed
was released. At long last, Ed’s ordeal was over. With no apologies
offered, Finley and he were allowed to leave the country.

Déjà
Vu

Perhaps
more than ever before, Americans are awakened to the Middle- and Near-
East, its politics and culture. Yemen is known today as home of Osama
bin Laden’s ancestors—also, the land of American-born and
educated Yemeni cleric, known popularly as “the Bin Laden of the
Internet.”[3]
Ed’s experiences provide a riveting look at a time and place that,
to this day, few Americans fully understand.

The
Islamic Jihad of Yemen is an al Qaeda terrorist affiliate that claimed
responsibility for the 2008 American Embassy attack in Yemen. And it
was off the coast of Yemen that, in a deadly suicide attack, the USS
Cole was bombed, taking from America seventeen of her “best and
brightest” young men and women.

Late
in 2010 and early 2011, protesters demanded that the President of Yemen
Ali Abdullah Saleh end his three-decade-long rule.[4]
A long-time ally of Iraq, the president supported “the Butcher
of Baghdad’s” invasion of Kuwait. Awhile back, dissident
Yemeni generals and tribesmen accused the embattled president of surrendering
Abyan province to "terrorists" after suspected al Qa'eda militants
took its capital. Typical to the region, many were left dead.

Though
decades have passed since Ed’s wrongful imprisonment, complaints
in the wake of the Arab Spring remain much the same—namely, lack
of democratic reform, widespread corruption, and human rights abuses.
Just last March, when unarmed demonstrators were fired upon, Yemen’s
president blamed local residents for the ensuing massacre. While arresting
many in the university square, plain clothed policemen wielded daggers
and sticks.[5]

The
End of the Matter

As
was the case decades (even centuries) earlier, tenets of Islam, as practiced
today, clash irreconcilably with Western ideals of personal and religious
liberty, gender equality, free enterprise, and government of, by, and
for the people. This applies all the more when Marxism is introduced.
Acknowledging said distinctions is not Islamo-phobic, nor “elitist,”
as the PC crowd would have us to believe.[6]

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Yes,
of course, we make the effort to understand others, and by all means
we appreciate their noteworthy contributions; but, for the sake of appearing
“tolerant,” we mustn’t ignore very real affronts to
the life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness we, as Americans, have
been blessed to enjoy.

We
do well to consider the words of Dinesh D’Souza,[7]
reminding us “America is the greatest, freest and most decent
society in existence. It is an oasis of goodness in a desert of cynicism
and barbarism. This country, once an experiment unique in the world,
is now the last best hope for the world.”

1.Miranda
Warning2.
These observations were drawn from Ed Franklin’s personal memoirs
of his captivity in Aden, South Yemen (1974).3.South
Yemen4.Abdullah
Saleh5.Yemen
Rights Monitor6.
Following his captivity, Ed Franklin resumed his teaching career—first,
in Missouri, then in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Upon returning to his
home state of Illinois, Ed anticipated his upcoming April wedding. Unfortunately,
while driving to Pleasant Hill to run errands, Ed’s car was hit
head on by a semi truck in its failed attempt to pass on a blind curve.
Ed died instantly7.
Dinesh D’Souza has been called one of the "top young, public-policy
makers in the country" by Investor’s Business Daily. The
New York Times Magazine named him one of America's most influential
conservative thinkers. The World Affairs Council lists him as one of
the nation's 500 leading authorities on international issues. Newsweek
cited him as one of the country's most prominent Asian Americans. D'Souza's
articles have appeared in virtually every major magazine and newspaper,
including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic Monthly,
Vanity Fair, New Republic, and National Review. He has appeared on numerous
television programs, including the Today Show, Nightline, The News Hour,
O'Reilly Factor, Moneyline, and Hannity and Colmes.

Daughter of an
Army Colonel, Debra graduated with distinction from the University of
Iowa. She then completed a Master of Education degree from the University
of Washington. These were followed by Bachelor of Theology and Master
of Ministries degrees-both from Pacific School of Theology.

While a teacher
in Kuwait, Debra undertook a three-month journey from the Persian Gulf
to London by means of VW "bug"! One summer, she tutored the daughter of
Kuwait's Head of Parliament while serving as superintendent of Kuwait's
first Vacation Bible School.

Having authored
the ABCs of Globalism and ABCs
of Cultural -Isms, Debra speaks to Christian and secular groups alike.
Her radio spots air globally. Presently, Debra co-hosts WOMANTalk
radio with Sharon Hughes and Friends, and she contributes monthly commentaries
to Changing Worldviews and NewsWithViews.com. Debra calls the Pacific
Northwest home.

We
do well to consider the words of Dinesh D’Souza, reminding us “America
is the greatest, freest and most decent society in existence. It is an
oasis of goodness in a desert of cynicism and barbarism. This country,
once an experiment unique in the world, is now the last best hope for
the world.”